Category Archives: Duncan Reynolds

How often have you been to hear a talk and found yourself distracted by the bright colours and flying animations on the Power Point behind the speaker? How many times have you been given a copy of slides before going into a conference hall and discovered the speaker is simply reading what you already have.

Well, for a group of people in Switzerland it has happened one too many times. They are trying to ban the world’s favourite presentation software. The founder of the Anti-PowerPoint Party, Matthias Poehm, believes that £310bn could be saved each year worldwide if the program ceased to exist. Matthias’ solution to the lack of presentations, “take a flip-chart”.

Giving a lecture and just being able to talk with no aids is a great skill and is arguably being lost in today’s technology-obsessed society. Rekindling those skills by forcing people to give talks with just a few prompt cards might be a step forward.

£310bn got me thinking, and after a quick Google search found that £1.6bn would save 4.2 million lives in 7 years from malaria, so £310bn would mathematically eradicate the disease with cash to spare. It is also enough to provide everyone in America, Russia, Brazil, Japan, Germany, Thailand, France, South Korea and the U.K. with an iPad. This would mean that business meetings could take place from living rooms around the world, saving more money and the environment.

So why have fewer than 300 people signed the petition to support Poehm? Well it’s not realistic is it? There are so many pointless things in this world, such as: electric pencil sharpeners, corn on the cob holders and electric staplers (it’s not that much physical effort to use a stapler is it?). If we are going to start culling products for being modern but not hugely necessary then I believe things like those should be the first to go, not computer programs that have the ability to brighten up even the dullest of talks.

Speakers will continue to stand or fall on the quality of their talks with or without Power Point.

The Fixed-Term Parliament Bill is currently in “ping-pong” in the Lords and has been for a number of weeks. Given this delay, can it truly be considered a step in the right direction to modernize British politics and ensure our system of government remains progressively democratic.

As the Liberal Democrat peer Lord Holme reflected, the ability for the incumbent Prime Minster to call a date of dissolution is like “a race in which the Prime Minister is allowed to approach it with his running shoes in one hand and his starting gun in the other” and certainly, since the end of WWII this appears to have occurred on five occasions. (Harold Macmillan in 1959, Margaret Thatcher in 1983 and 1987 and Tong Blair in 2001 and 2005). However, arguably, the advantage of such an ability doesn’t appear to be that significant.

This is exemplified by the case of Harold Macmillan in 1970 who looked again to take advantage of favourable opinion polls but subsequently suffered a shock general election defeat. If Blair and Thatcher had had to continue to their full terms then there is little evidence that the results would have been any different.

This then begs the question; why in their 2010 manifestos were the Liberal Democrats and Labour so keen to introduce fixed-term parliaments if the advantages were so minor?

Well, both parties would argue that even if the advantage was minor, it was still illegitimate on principal to try to gain an advantage. However, the coalition gave the Lib Dems an even more pressing reason for fixed-terms; If Cameron is unable to call dissolution on his terms, he would also be unable to oust them from government.

The Fixed-Term Parliament Bill would require MPs from all parties to support it (two-thirds of the Commons). Seemingly a good idea as it would remove the power of dissolution, not only on the part of the Prime Minister, but also from the government as a whole. However, most back-bench MPs would adhere to their party whips meaning that Parliament would have little power to dissolve as party leaders would call dissolution and whip their MPs accordingly.

David Cameron expressed his objections to fixed-term parliaments, before the inclusion of them in the Coalition Agreement, in both “political” and “moral” terms. He remarked that a “lame-duck government” should not be allowed to carry on with a small majority for years legitimately under the law, and that a new Prime Minister should face the public before he or she should have the authority to govern.

The “moral” argument is seemingly ratified by the British Public when in 2007 42% of people polled by Ipsos-MORI believed Gordon Brown was wrong not to go to the nation for legitimacy.

There are further reasons why an early dissolution may be called legitimately. If a brand new policy has been announced and a government wishes to gain a mandate for it, then an election is the perfect way to achieve that. Asquith did this twice in 1910 for the “People’s Budget” (rejected by the Lords) and for the “Parliament Act” (which ironically limited the power of the House of Lords).

If coalitions were to become the norm rather than the exception in theU.K., changes of coalition partners would naturally happen. A general election would be needed for the public to have faith in the new government and the Fixed-Term Parliaments Bill would make it harder to call an election for this legitimacy.

The Fixed-Term Parliament Bill certainly has the good intentions of making U.K. politics more legitimate but I feel that it is a wrong move, with little power shift, simply denying (or making it very hard) Prime Ministers the ability to gain legitimacy in other areas where it is needed.